20 Popular Survival Myths That Not Only Are Wrong But Also Dangerous, Shared By People On Twitter
Even an optimist has to agree that every day that you are alive, there is a possibility, even if it’s small and almost invisible, that something bad can happen to you. Even if you don’t leave home or don’t even get up from your bed. The chances are low, but never zero.
Because you live without thinking about it every day, you might not know how you could protect yourself from these dangers. On the other hand, you might have read some tips, but never actually had to apply them, so you don’t know if they are even valid.
To clear up the air on the topic, the popular Twitter account UberFacts that now has a following of 13.6M people asked “What's a popular survival myth that's actually wrong and could possibly get you killed” and let’s take a look at what knowledge people shared.
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UberFacts is a Twitter account focused on interesting facts that satisfy our curiosity and the need to know random things about the world that aren’t really useful, but just cool. This time they asked a question that made people share facts that are actually quite useful.
People took the opportunity to let out their frustration about misconceptions on how to survive dangerous situations because unnoticeably, they have become the truth even though they are myths.
Almost 400 people joined the conversation and many of them mentioned facts related to how to protect yourself from wild animals, which makes sense, as it is a very possible encounter depending on where you live.
They also touched on survival tips during natural disasters, being attacked with a gun or being stranded in the middle of nowhere without supplies.
Jep, makes you think you are warm, but makes you cool out even faster. Very dangerous.
Such information which turns out to be false is called misinformation and researchers who write the article “The psychological drivers of misinformation belief and its resistance to correction” believe that it is dangerous as it “poses an inevitable challenge for human cognition and social interaction because it is a consequence of the fact that people frequently err and sometimes lie.”
Also, now it’s easier than ever to spread misinformation, whether it’s intentional or not, because of modern technology and its huge reach, as there are 5 billion internet users around the world, which is more than half of the world’s population.
I might be wrong but I'm sure I read this was basically said as a psychological thing to stop people panicking.
That - and anything shields better against radiation than any nothing does. Depends highly on the type of ray that is to hit you, with alpha ray being the easiest to block, due to being large particles. Relatively large...
Load More Replies...Actually, it really depends. My job in the Army was to lob nuclear missiles, so I have some knowledge and training. If you are close to ground zero, you are toast no matter what you do, but as you get further away, your chances improve. The desk may protect you from dislodged ceiling material and flying glass. The walls of the classroom may protect you from the radiant heat, assuming the whole school is not pulverized by the blast. In the moment of the explosion, radiation is the least of your problems. After it, you need a mask, PPE, a shoe brush and a clean room to survive. That was my kit. I was underwhelmed, but then I learned their purpose. Let's face it, a nuke just went off nearby. You are having a bad day.
Makes sense. Within a certain radius of a blast, you'd be dead. Outside a certain radius, you'd be fine. Surely there are is a spectrum in the middle where survival is affected by factors, including your surroundings and position.
Load More Replies...Of course not. To protect from a nuclear attack you get into a refrigerator. Have you learned nothing from Indiana Jones?
Actually, it might protect you. If you are far enough away from the epicenter of the blast so that your school is not destroyed but the ceiling collapses in your classroom, then the desk will protect you. Contrary to popular belief, a nuclear bomb does not totally destroy everything and kill everyone within the blast zone. In fact, there are a total of about 119,000 people still alive who survived the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.
Hang on here: A tactical warhead's nuclear blast is NOT as assuredly lethal as most people think. If you're inside, you could be reasonably well shielded from radiation poisoning and from the thermal blast, but the building you're in could easily collapse, windows would be blown in, the ceiling shaken loose.... the desk could be helpful, no?
Doesn't this kind of depend on where you are within the blast radius, the strength of the building, etc., etc.? I know it's going to do nothing to protect you from radiation, or if you're too close to the epicenter, it's not going to protect you from the heat or the shock wave. But, it just might save you from a collapsing roof. It might keep you alive long enough to get medical care. It's small comfort, I know, but it's better than nothing.
The only thing it might protect you from is debris like the windows being blown out. And yes, it was a lot of psyops.
Growing up during the cold war, we had this joke. "What do you do during nuclear attack?" "You sit on the pot and put the lid on your head." "Why the lid, though?" "So that it closes the pot after your ash falls into it, to prevent the wind from scattering it." At the age of 7, we thought it was funny as hell...
In the Army rhey tell you to go prone with Kevlar helmet towards the blast. They want you to die quicker.
I'm in California and this was our normal drill for earthquakes! Radiation seeping into everything?! I think not.
The desk would protect you from the debris of the initial blast if you were far away enough from ground zero to survive. Then you would leave as soon as possible.
Load More Replies...When the Bombs start dropping you don't want to survive. Better a quick death than a prolonged suffering just to finally die anyways. People that think they going to be mad max are dangerously delusional.
Unfortunately it's often those same dangerously delusional people who have access to the launch codes.
Load More Replies...There used to be school drills during the Cold War which were if a nuclear attack occurred, kids would suck under their desks. At least that’s what I think it is
Load More Replies...Never blindly trust your government's advice, no matter where you live. Do your own research.
that’s not advice people give. This is used during earthquakes, to protect from objects falling. This would never be used during a nuclear attack, so this post is incorrect.
Except it was given. Pretty much up until the early 80's (with Threads and The Day After Tomorrow) the West genuinely thought a nuclear attack was a semi-survivable event. In the UK they sent out leaflets advising how to build your own nuclear shelter using internal wooden doors. No, i am not making any of this up - we really were that naive
Load More Replies...But it’s not only the widely available information being repeated multiple times that contributes to people believing in false facts. “When deciding what is true, people are often biased to believe in the validity of information, and ‘go with their gut’ and intuitions instead of deliberating.”
What is also convincing about misinformation is that not only can it spread quickly, but “often contains appeals to emotion, which can increase persuasion.”
There are multiple ways misinformation is spread. University of Victoria points out social media as one of the biggest contributors to spreading false information: “Regular users of social media are to blame for a lot of this spread, as they like, share, and otherwise engage with posts containing misinformation.”
Another way is circular reporting, which means that a news outlet publishes information and others pick up citing the original source, trusting they have the correct facts or willingly continuing the false narrative.
Yeah I hate bullying but standing up to them is just going to p**s them off. Not like the movies..
The ways to combat misinformation are “a fact-based correction that directly addresses inaccuracies in the misinformation and provides accurate information” and addressing “the logical fallacies common in some types of disinformation.”
Researchers believe that social media plays a big role in combating misinformation “because they can reduce false beliefs not just in the target of the correction but among everyone that sees the correction — a process termed observational correction.”
I've always found it weird in movies where someone is lost/stranded/ trapped and the first thing they worry about is starvation. No one even mentions the need for a safe, steady water supply despite the fact a human can last weeks and weeks without food but only a few days without water.
But it’s not easy to convince someone that their source of information is misleading instead of yours. If you would like to know more about the psychology of a person believing in conspiracy theories and what is the best way to communicate with them, you can read another Bored Panda article here, in which we talked with Karen Douglas, a Professor of Social Psychology at University of Kent, who studies the psychology of conspiracy theories.
Have you ever fallen for false information? Have you believed in any of these survival myths? Let us know in the comments and also, if there are any more survival myths you know that weren’t mentioned in the list, share them as well!
Growing up near the coast I carried grocery store meat tenderizer in my tackle box. Dashing good bit over the sting seemed to help
The best advice is laying flat on the floor with your hands over your head.
Note: this post originally had 21 images. It’s been shortened to the top 20 images based on user votes.
Note: this post originally had 21 images. It’s been shortened to the top 20 images based on user votes. SERIOUSLY??? Come on BP
And the one they cut off is actually helpful to know how to to take cover in a tornado.
Load More Replies...Don’t put something between the teeth of someone having a seizure. You have a good chance of chipping their teeth and then they would aspirate the shard.
I'm a bit suprised Bear Grylls' favourite pastime, drinking urine, isn't on the list.
Here’s one - drinking urine is NOT sterile. Thanks Fight Club for that bad advice.
Load More Replies...#21. "Taking cover under an overpass to shelter from a tornado." .... You're welcome
If someone has (nearly) drowned, place him/her on a flat surface and ventilate (mouth-to-mouth most likely) the majority of drowned people will spontaneously breathe -somewhat similar of how newborns do. Also, DON'T compress the abdomen "in order to evacuate the water inside". That maneuvre might displace said water into the lungs and further complicate the case. Head to the hospital immediately afterwards. If someone gets burned (water, fire, metal) apply temperate (NOT cold) water on the damaged area for at least 10 minutes to fully cool down it down. If someone is having a seizure, remove any objects that can cause injury and wait for the convulsion to fade, which usually takes less than 5 minutes. A seizure that persists longer than 15 minutes, though, is called status epilepticus, a medical emergency that requires immediate hospital admission. This mostly occurs to known epileptics that don't adequately adhere to their treatment.
My grandmother taught me to stay away from oak trees during thunderstorms and to take shelter under a beech tree. "Eichen sollst du weichen, Buchen sollst du suchen." Never tested. To this day I wonder why the flash should be able to distinguish tree species
And do you know what all of this comes down to, kids? Only. Professionals. Are at. Professional. Level. PRO-FESS-ION-ALS.
Not anything listed, nor relevant, I suppose, but in the disaster movies (my favorite genre...), the extras are scripted to stand there like dimwits, staring at the coming huge event, THEN run like morons when it's only feet away. If I was in that scenario, I'd just sit down and let it happen. I can't run anymore due an incorrectly healed hip fracture, combined with my age, and where would I go anyhow? At my age, I'd just as soon let my life end that way as to have to die a long, slow, agonizing, age-related death. My children are already dead, and weren't old enough to have children of their own first. My parents are dead, my sister and brother live hundreds of miles from me, and we aren't close anyhow, so why run? Why would anyone run when it's impossible to outlive a huge, monstrous, VEHICLE crushing wave or tornado? If vehicles weighing tons and built of metal are being utterly destroyed, why would humans be foolish enough to believe their puny, fragile bodies will survive?
Note: this post originally had 21 images. It’s been shortened to the top 20 images based on user votes. SERIOUSLY??? Come on BP
And the one they cut off is actually helpful to know how to to take cover in a tornado.
Load More Replies...Don’t put something between the teeth of someone having a seizure. You have a good chance of chipping their teeth and then they would aspirate the shard.
I'm a bit suprised Bear Grylls' favourite pastime, drinking urine, isn't on the list.
Here’s one - drinking urine is NOT sterile. Thanks Fight Club for that bad advice.
Load More Replies...#21. "Taking cover under an overpass to shelter from a tornado." .... You're welcome
If someone has (nearly) drowned, place him/her on a flat surface and ventilate (mouth-to-mouth most likely) the majority of drowned people will spontaneously breathe -somewhat similar of how newborns do. Also, DON'T compress the abdomen "in order to evacuate the water inside". That maneuvre might displace said water into the lungs and further complicate the case. Head to the hospital immediately afterwards. If someone gets burned (water, fire, metal) apply temperate (NOT cold) water on the damaged area for at least 10 minutes to fully cool down it down. If someone is having a seizure, remove any objects that can cause injury and wait for the convulsion to fade, which usually takes less than 5 minutes. A seizure that persists longer than 15 minutes, though, is called status epilepticus, a medical emergency that requires immediate hospital admission. This mostly occurs to known epileptics that don't adequately adhere to their treatment.
My grandmother taught me to stay away from oak trees during thunderstorms and to take shelter under a beech tree. "Eichen sollst du weichen, Buchen sollst du suchen." Never tested. To this day I wonder why the flash should be able to distinguish tree species
And do you know what all of this comes down to, kids? Only. Professionals. Are at. Professional. Level. PRO-FESS-ION-ALS.
Not anything listed, nor relevant, I suppose, but in the disaster movies (my favorite genre...), the extras are scripted to stand there like dimwits, staring at the coming huge event, THEN run like morons when it's only feet away. If I was in that scenario, I'd just sit down and let it happen. I can't run anymore due an incorrectly healed hip fracture, combined with my age, and where would I go anyhow? At my age, I'd just as soon let my life end that way as to have to die a long, slow, agonizing, age-related death. My children are already dead, and weren't old enough to have children of their own first. My parents are dead, my sister and brother live hundreds of miles from me, and we aren't close anyhow, so why run? Why would anyone run when it's impossible to outlive a huge, monstrous, VEHICLE crushing wave or tornado? If vehicles weighing tons and built of metal are being utterly destroyed, why would humans be foolish enough to believe their puny, fragile bodies will survive?